Ovid_and_Flem said:Hmmmmm....coyote fit in a mustang II fastback chassis?
I want to put a 1uz with itb's and blitz nur-spec mufflers in a mustang II
Ovid_and_Flem said:Hmmmmm....coyote fit in a mustang II fastback chassis?
I want to put a 1uz with itb's and blitz nur-spec mufflers in a mustang II
Personally, I LOL'd at the idea of F&F3 when they stuffed the RB motor in the Mustang. I've wanted to stuff a turbo import I6 into classic iron for a LONG time.
I know a guy who was planning on putting a Triton V10 in his Crown Vic purely so his Crown Vic would make straight piped V10 noises. That was the only motivator. Car had already been through 3 other turbo mod motors before that, it had a 6.2 truck engine in it at the time. Apparently 4.6 4v from a Lincoln is the way to go if you want to turbo a stock mod motor in a Crown Vic and make power on the cheap. He went to the 6.2 later because he got one cheap after the 4v exploded (too much nitrous) and wanted to try it.
Here, there's my useful topic related though for this tread. Coyote is still too complicated and expensive for this crowd but a 4.6 4V is doable and still pretty good.
I love that the original poster was just talking about snagging a truck coyote to swap.
Howoware the new coyotes on reliability? I haven't heard much about them tbh. (No news is good news?)
Trackmouse said:In reply to Ovid_and_Flem :
Sadly man, some folks absolutely MUST argue that an LS engine is the only way to go. And therefore it causes heated debate (every time, every thread).
Literally nobody said that. The only "anti" Coyote stuff, if you want to call it that, has to do with cost and size.
dculberson said:Trackmouse said:In reply to Ovid_and_Flem :
Sadly man, some folks absolutely MUST argue that an LS engine is the only way to go. And therefore it causes heated debate (every time, every thread).
Literally nobody said that. The only "anti" Coyote stuff, if you want to call it that, has to do with cost and size.
THIS. Someone went off the deep end.
frenchyd said:In reply to MichaelYount :
There is a JaguarV12 powered Miata in Australia.
Yup - anything into anything. My favorite line from Dave Marion's Hemi Bugeye went something like this -- "....we had to alter the stops on the steering rack so the front tires wouldn't hit the VALVE COVERS at full lock...." So - bring on the wide Coyotes! Meanwhile I'll stick with the not-exactly-plug-play LS in mine.
I was at Cooper Customs in S. FL. today to look at a race car someone wants me to work on and up on the lift in the shop I spotted this and thought of this thread. So I asked the guys if they'd mind lowering the lift and if I could take a few pics, so here ya go! It's got an electric steering set up.
[URL=http://s240.photobucket.com/user/NOTATA/media/COOPER%20CUSTOMS/20171212_151824_zps3znpisup.jpg.html][/URL]
[URL=http://s240.photobucket.com/user/NOTATA/media/COOPER%20CUSTOMS/20171212_151926_zpsf3ireqd0.jpg.html][/URL]
[URL=http://s240.photobucket.com/user/NOTATA/media/COOPER%20CUSTOMS/20171212_151953_zpsxmtikubd.jpg.html][/URL]
[URL=http://s240.photobucket.com/user/NOTATA/media/COOPER%20CUSTOMS/20171212_153211_zpsymszxt70.jpg.html][/URL]
MichaelYount said:You can power just about anything with anything because there is no substitute for cubic dollars.
That reminds me of a comment I saw on a video where a turbo Caravan blew away a stockish Mustang GT.
"i guess you can make anything fast if you have enough money."
(how much are fish tank valves?)
Has anyone figured out a half way decent controller to run the coyotes. A few years ago one of the big mustang companies came out with a coyote swap for the s197 and mutliplw people put them in and had major driveability problems and were way down on power.
I assumed they figured it out and this afternoon i was talking to a co-worker who is a big mustang guy and he said he helped a friend do a coyote swap on a new edge and they had similar problems with thw pcm.
Here's another - the 5.2L flat-crank "Shelby" version in a Daytona coupe replica -- http://www.streetmusclemag.com/event-coverage/pri-coverage-event-coverage/pri-2017-580hp-5-2-liter-factory-five-daytona-coupe/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=pri-2017-580hp-5-2-liter-factory-five-daytona-coupe
Opti said:Has anyone figured out a half way decent controller to run the coyotes. A few years ago one of the big mustang companies came out with a coyote swap for the s197 and mutliplw people put them in and had major driveability problems and were way down on power.
I assumed they figured it out and this afternoon i was talking to a co-worker who is a big mustang guy and he said he helped a friend do a coyote swap on a new edge and they had similar problems with thw pcm.
What's the issue? Trying to control an engine with variable valve timing using a PCM that never had that capability? There are tons of Coyote swaps running around in older Mustangs etc, so it seems like somebody has it figured out.
Keith Tanner said:JBasham said:The Internet is just a contrary place...
It's a powerful motor in a small package so I can see why it's so popular. Personally if I wanted to go that way I would just buy the C5 and start enjoying the motor at the track immediately.
. . . .
The big downside to LS swaps is the "why not get a Corvette?" question. As if the engine becomes the single defining feature of any car it's in. Do Coyote swappers get told they should have just bought a Mustang GT? I doubt it somehow.
Dang, Keith, I need to stop and just say this: I think of your motor-swapped beauties as RICH man's Corvettes!
Generally, I think of high-mile used C5s as The Answer of track cars, no disrespect to the glory of the Mazdas. The Chevy is not quite my zip code in terms of individual expression and personal freedom. It's just the easy button. Cheap speed and a good handle, widely available, and you can sell it easy if you get tired of it.
I guess I would have to say, I think of LS swaps as rich man's motor swaps, because they're what all the cool kids use. I am most definitely not a cool guy.
STM317 said:Opti said:Has anyone figured out a half way decent controller to run the coyotes. A few years ago one of the big mustang companies came out with a coyote swap for the s197 and mutliplw people put them in and had major driveability problems and were way down on power.
I assumed they figured it out and this afternoon i was talking to a co-worker who is a big mustang guy and he said he helped a friend do a coyote swap on a new edge and they had similar problems with thw pcm.
What's the issue? Trying to control an engine with variable valve timing using a PCM that never had that capability? There are tons of Coyote swaps running around in older Mustangs etc, so it seems like somebody has it figured out.
It’s not that they can’t make them run in a swap, it’s that they won’t deliver maximum horsepower without spending big money.
You can squeeze one into an e36. I wish there were photos showing how tight it is, but photobucket sucks. This one is a truck 5.0 which may explain his 336whp. The nice thing is that he's using the TR3650 which I prefer greatly to the T56 for it's longer throws and smoother shifting.
racerfink said:STM317 said:Opti said:Has anyone figured out a half way decent controller to run the coyotes. A few years ago one of the big mustang companies came out with a coyote swap for the s197 and mutliplw people put them in and had major driveability problems and were way down on power.
I assumed they figured it out and this afternoon i was talking to a co-worker who is a big mustang guy and he said he helped a friend do a coyote swap on a new edge and they had similar problems with thw pcm.
What's the issue? Trying to control an engine with variable valve timing using a PCM that never had that capability? There are tons of Coyote swaps running around in older Mustangs etc, so it seems like somebody has it figured out.
It’s not that they can’t make them run in a swap, it’s that they won’t deliver maximum horsepower without spending big money.
So what's the hang up? And what's the big money solution that unlocks everything?
The 4.4L DOHC BMW swap into the E36 chassis is fairly common.....motor similar in size to the Coyote. The brake booster area is tight even with an LS -- most go to hydro-boost for brakes. But man - to swap in a Coyote and then almost get your ass handed to you by a 4 door pickup.....
In reply to STM317 :
I assume ford finally released a controller, like the small ecoboosts, and its probably around 1500.
I think a couple years ago the issue with trying to use the oem pcms is they started doing goofy stuff when they werent getting signals from all of the other modules from the original car.
Im not a ford guy, this is all speculation and foggy 2 year old memories.
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